Robotics, AI, and the Quest for Human-Centered Autonomous Systems (RAS Dist. Lecturer)

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Robotics, AI, and the Quest for Human-Centered Autonomous Systems

Join us for an exciting presentation by IEEE Fellow and RAS Distinguished Lecturer, Dr. Lydia E. Kavraki! This event at UTSA is open to everyone, and we're especially encouraging IEEE student members from all San Antonio universities to come out.

Before the talk begins, hang out and grab some light refreshments at our reception, generously sponsored by the Klesse College of Engineering.

Where to go: Please park at the Bauerle Road Garage (BRG). From there, just head across the street to the bottom floor of the Main Building to join the event. We will provide parking validation either when you arrive or after the event, so make sure to grab yours before you head out!



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



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  • University of Texas at San Antonio
  • 1 UTSA Circle
  • San Antonio, Texas
  • United States 78249
  • Building: Main Buiilding
  • Room Number: 0.104

  • Contact Event Hosts
  • Starts 02 March 2026 02:00 PM UTC
  • Ends 30 April 2026 04:55 AM UTC
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. Lydia Kavraki of Rice University

Topic:

Robotics, AI, and the Quest for Human-Centered Autonomous Systems

Over the past sixty years, robots have progressed from isolated industrial artifacts to interactive, semi-autonomous agents increasingly embedded in next-generation factories, hospitals, and homes. Yet, realizing robots that collaborate safely, robustly, and transparently with people and with one another continues to pose deep theoretical and practical challenges. This talk will trace the evolution of the sampling-based paradigm in robot motion planning with emphasis on recent developments and highlight its central role in enabling reasoning under uncertainty, long-horizon autonomy, and human-centered collaboration. It will discuss how motion planning confronts the fundamental tension between the complexity of high-dimensional robotic systems and the stringent constraints imposed by physical embodiment, including dynamics, sensing, and real-world interaction. Building on this foundation, the talk will explore the relationship between motion planning and higher-level decision-making, where specifications can define what a robot must accomplish rather than how it should accomplish it, and the frameworks required to support more capable and reliable robots that serve people in shared environments.

 

Biography:

BIO

Professor Lydia Kavraki Lydia E. Kavraki is the Kenneth and Audrey Kennedy Professor of Computing and Professor of Computer Science and Bioengineering at Rice University. She is also the Director of the Ken Kennedy Institute for AI and Computing. Kavraki’s research develops the AI and the algorithmics needed to connect the digital to the physical world. She has two main areas of application for her research. In robotics, she develops methodologies for motion planning, machine learning methods for reasoning under uncertainty, and multimodal frameworks for instructing robots and collaborating with them. In computational biomedicine, she develops AI methods to understand biomolecular interactions and aid the design of new therapeutics. Kavraki is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Medicine, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is the recipient of the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society Pioneer Award and the IEEE Frances E. Allen Medal. More information about her work can be found at https://profiles.rice.edu/faculty/lydia-e-kavraki





Agenda

6:00pm - Reception (light hors d'oeuvres)

6:45pm - Begin seating in auditorium

6:45 - 7:00pm - Zoom meeting will be opened to virtual attendees

7:00pm - Welcome and announcements 
                LSS Robotics and Automation Chapter
                University of San Antonio RAS Student Branch

7:10pm - Introduction of Dr. Lydia E. Kavraki
              Presentation: "Robotics, AI, and the Quest for Human-Centered Autonomous Systems"

8:00pm - Questions and Discussion

8:15pm - Adjourn